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2.21: Noble Gases

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    291316
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     Blue neon lights on a subway station
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\) (Credit: User:Ingolfson/Wikimedia Commons; Source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Surrounds_Of_Newmarket_Train_Station_II.jpg(opens in new window); License: Public Domain)

    What gives these lights their color?

    Cities at night would be rather boring without all the bright lights. They provide colorful Illuminations and help make things much more visible. We call these lights “neon lights,” but they use several gases to make the different colors.

    Noble Gases

    The reactivity of an element can give us important clues as to the electron configuration of that material. If an element is extremely unreactive, this suggests that the electron configuration is such that adding or removing electrons is very unlikely. There must be a stable electron configuration that resists further reaction.

    Noble gases on the periodic table
    Figure \(\PageIndex{2}\) (Credit: User:Cepheus/Wikimedia Commons, modified by CK-12 Foundation; Source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Periodic_table.svg(opens in new window); License: Public Domain)

    The Group 18 (once known as group VIII) elements are essentially chemically inert (light blue column on the right). All these elements exist as monatomic gases at room temperature. If we look at the electron configurations, we see that helium (atomic number 2) has a full shell of two \(s\) electrons. Since there are no electrons shielding this shell from the nucleus, these two electrons will be very difficult to remove, making helium unreactive.

    The remaining elements in the group have full outer shells consisting of two \(s\) electrons and six \(p\) electrons for an outer shell content of eight electrons. This particular arrangement renders the atoms fairly unreactive. This group has been referred to as the “inert” gases, indicating that they are chemically inert, or unreactive. Another popular term is “noble gases,” suggesting that these gases do not like to have much to do with the other, more common materials (or that they don’t do a lot of work).

    Noble Gas Compounds

    In more recent years, a number of reactions using the noble gas elements have been discovered. Although the conventional wisdom was that the complete outer shells of these elements would not allow them to react, some scientists believed that the outer electrons of the larger elements (such as Rn, Xe, and Kr) were far enough away from the nucleus that they should be able to be displaced under the right set of conditions. The first compound (XePtF6) was made with xenon in 1962. Since then, several compounds have been made with radon, xenon, krypton, and argon. Only helium and neon have not formed compounds at this time.

    Colors of Noble Gases 

    The different gases glow when an electric current is passed through them. Many of these gases are used in displays because of their chemical inertness. They are stable and will not react with other materials in the system. Radon also will give a reddish glow, but is not used because it is radioactive and will not retain its structure as radon for any significant length of time.

    Fluorescence colors of noble gases
    Figure \(\PageIndex{3}\) (Credit: User:Jurii/Wikimedia Commons; Source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Glowing_noble_gases.jpg(opens in new window); License: CC by 3.0(opens in new window))

    Royal Society of Chemistry - Colors of the Noble Gases

    Science Friday: 4850 Feet Below: The Hunt for Dark Matter

    Why is there a laboratory 4850 feet below the surface? It turns out the depth is a necessary component of the extremely sensitive detector called the Large Underground Xenon experiment. In this video by Science Friday, several scientists explain how this detector helps physicists look for extremely rare particles.

     

    Summary 

    • The noble gases are in Group VIII of the periodic table.
    • Helium has a full outer shell of two \(s\) electrons.
    • The other gases have full outer shells of two \(s\) and six \(p\) electrons.
    • Compounds have been formed with Rn, Xe, Kr, and Ar. 

    Review

    1. What elements comprise the noble elements?
    2. What state are they in at room temperature?
    3. Why is helium non-reactive?
    4. Why were the other noble gases believed to be non-reactive?
    5. When was the first compound formed from xenon?
    6. What happens when an electric current is passed through these gases?

    2.21: Noble Gases is shared under a CC BY-NC license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.